Boston Trying Out Solar-Powered "Smart Benches" In Parks 119
An anonymous reader writes Through a partnership with a MIT Media Lab spinoff, Changing Environments, Boston has announced that it will install solar-powered benches in several of its parks that allow you to charge your cell phone. The bench has a USB outlet, and also collects and shares a wide range of data, including location-based information, as well as air quality and noise-levels. "Your cell phone doesn't just make phone calls, why should our benches just be seats?" said Mayor Martin J. Walsh. "We are fortunate to have talented entrepreneurs and makers in Boston thinking creatively about sustainability and the next generation of amenities for our residents."
Re:Interesting... (Score:5, Informative)
From the article, "City officials said the first units in Boston will be funded by Cisco Systems, a leader in development of smart city solutions, at no cost to the city."
As for why Boston got them first, rather than other cities around the country, my guess would be because they're a local product. "The high-tech benches were invented by MIT Media Lab spinoff Changing Environments, a Verizon Innovation Program."
But ugly as hell (Score:5, Insightful)
So, you have this boxy thing mounted in the middle of the park bench. The promo photo has two attractive people awkwardly trying to look chic sitting next to something about he size of an old-school VCR bolted to the middle of the bench. Of course, you'd naturally stick your 32 oz triple malt latte on it, and any 9 year old with angry daddy issues will beat it with the nearest rock. Meanwhile, it provides no shade at all.
Great idea, utter failure in implementation. Instead:
1) Put the solar panel (even if small) on a pole OUT OF THE WAY so it lets you sit on the !@# seat, and provides at least a modicum of shade. Better yet, made the overhead cover the length of the bench so the shade is usable and you get some protection from light rain.
2) Put the USB charge port under the seat. This provides automatic protection from accidental strikes and also doesn't provide an automatic target for 9 year olds with angry daddy issues.
As it sits now, it's practically a show case example of some bad engineering product a la Dilbert.
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"So, you have this boxy thing mounted in the middle of the park bench."
Sit down for free, pay with the data from your phone.
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You may not have been paying attention, but ALL public benches in all cities, worldwide, are getting middle armrests or other dividers to prevent homeless from sleeping on them.
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From the article, "City officials said the first units in Boston will be funded by Cisco Systems, a leader in development of smart city solutions, at no cost to the city."
As for why Boston got them first, rather than other cities around the country, my guess would be because they're a local product. "The high-tech benches were invented by MIT Media Lab spinoff Changing Environments, a Verizon Innovation Program."
Would the reason be that winter and winter cold, snow, and the near location of MIT are a good justification. I would have also considered Buffalo in place of Boston, except that it gets too much snow.
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Your sarcasm may be closer to target, than you realized: MBTA fees are going up (again) tomorrow [mbta.com].
But what wouldn't a benevolent progressive government pay for the ability to collect more data? Especiall
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But what wouldn't a benevolent progressive government pay for the ability to collect more data? Especially from the phones voluntarily plugged-in by unsuspecting residents?
From TFA:
The benches also connect wirelessly, using Verizon’s network, to the Internet to upload location-based environmental information, such as air quality and noise-level data.
I don't think they're trying to upload data through your phone without your knowledge, I believe the "cell phone charging" and "connects to the cell network" are unrelated, aside from the fact that both are supposedly powered via the solar panels.
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That would've been a relatively small problem and is not, what I meant. My suspicion is, they may try to collect data from the plugged-in phone. Call-logs, pictures, locations you've visited — all those things, police now need a warrant for [washingtontimes.com] — unless express consent by plugging your phone into their socket.
What data can be collected may depend on your device's model and settings, but apparata for extracting info [go.com]
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they may try to collect data from the plugged-in phone. Call-logs, pictures, locations you've visited
If they wanted to get data from your phone, wouldn't it be easier to just download it over the network while you're walking down the street ?
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If a public bench have a fleshlight attached, would you put your dick into it?
No?
Well, then don't put your USB into the digital equivalent.
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I can tell you are a Tea Partier, ...
Nahh, hes probably just a garden variety /.er who didn't RTFA in a desperate rush to get his knee jerk reaction in as a first post. (for closure, another commenter already pointed out this is not funded by the city)
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Maybe not the initial cost, but who pays for maintenance and repairs? And maintenance and repairs ten years from now? And replacements, when they start breaking in a few months?
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Maintenance and repair will be a city services guy throwing it in the back of a truck and taking it to a landfill.
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Hopefully the city will pay for maintenance in 10 years. Because that will mean that the program was a huge success and is highly useful to it's residents. The program will probably have lived through more than one administration so theres a slightly smaller chance that the 10 year life was sustained entirely by cronyism. Or if you prefer, private industry will take over once they see how successful it is and all the risk has been mitigated by the city.
i did this (Score:5, Interesting)
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i did this in my backyard. except with a bar. I build a bar that had a canopy, on the canopy i attached a few panels, enough to power the lighting, a small stereo and a handful of USB chargers build into the bar itself. I dont have a large backup battery yet so its really only useful during the day time right now, however this makes perfect sense to do in parks, small scale solar is great for isolated outdoor areas
Florida has had solar-powered benches for ages.
On a typical summer day, they can sear unprotected flesh to medium-well done in under 5 minutes!
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Someone put gum in the outlets. (Score:5, Insightful)
Considering how much trouble cities seem to have maintaining a bench made of wood I question how long these are going to last. Honestly I give them a month before they're all broken or vandalized.
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or 3 days before all of the panels have been removed and sold by young entrepreneurs.
Re: Someone put gum in the outlets. (Score:1)
Quick question for anyone, on the topic of vandalism: If someone theoretically poured water or Coke or something into a USB slot, what would happen? What are the worst possible forms of sabotage to expect to USB ports?
And yeah, are there any reasons why this won't be vandalized?
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Chewing gum stuffed into the
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Some simple epoxy around the wires and a current limiter (common in just about every usb setup anyway) will take care of conductive liquids (by preventing them from doing damage to the electronics with the limit until the liquid drains out of the port).
If you want to damage the electronics, carry a stun gun and zap the port. Or carry a portable battery powered inverter and stuff 120VAC into the system. Conductive liquids aren't going to damage the electronics, they already have current limiting. But simple salt water will turn copper conductors into green goo pretty well.
Chewing gum stuffed into the USB port is likely the most common and hardest to solve problem there.
Superglue. One quick squirt with a dollar store tube. And if someone comes along right behind you and plugs in before it sets, that's even more fun.
but I'm not a vandal
We can tell.
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I presume that it would be impossible to do without first removing the ones Cisco placed in there stock.
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Except I'm fairly certain the vast majority of Android and iOS devices now ask for permission befor
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but you can still grind on them right? (Score:2)
skateboarding can be a crime
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how long before (Score:2)
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What makes you think, they aren't from day one? The write-up talks about "collecting and sharing data", and TFA says:
Khm... At no
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NSA, or someone with (even) fewer scruples. It's only a matter of time before people start getting free malware with their charge.
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People are going to have to be smart (I know, it'll never happen) and use charge-only cables with the data lines physically disconnected.
Then you'll have to trust whoever makes those.
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People are going to have to be smart (I know, it'll never happen) and use charge-only cables with the data lines physically disconnected.
It is the data lines that convey the information to the device that it is on a charger and may draw whatever current it needs. This is one of the biggest headaches of USB charging, when a company uses one method of signalling "charger" and another uses a different one. E.g., a resistor to ground or +5 on one of the data lines vs. a resistor of a certain value vs. a resistor of a different value.
Then there are oddball companies who decide they won't charge at all via USB unless they can negotiate a current
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There are chips available that monitor the USB data lines for all of the available charging protocols (shorted - chinese, fixed resistance - android, fixed voltage - apple) and will then current limit appropriately.
I'm also sure that i've seen a USB charging "condom" on slashdot before, which had two of the USB current limiting controllers back to back to allow charging to occur, whilst providing isolation of the data lines to prevent malicious data exchange.
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That said, who would plug a USB device into a park bench?
The same kind of people who plug them into USB sockets at the airport.
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You do realize that most phones use them to for simple communication of how many ma the charger can provide. Sure newer designs do not require that but I don't see apple changing anytime soon. Several companies make "condoms" that allow and even adapt those signals yet stay safe.
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Didn't you RTFA? They were built by Cisco.
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Didn't you RTFA? They were built by Cisco.
RTFA?... but isn't this slashdot?
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Who did _you_ think was paying for them?
Also, did you know that you can charge your phone faster by enabling debug mode over USB? I read that on a flyer taped to one of those new benches in Boston...
Spike (Score:2)
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By plugging it in, you've agreed to the EULA...
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No, see, they'll follow the roll-out of the smart benches with the roll-out of Smart Bums, who for a nominal fee can tell you the weather, give you information about wind speed and direction with their natural stench, and even data on light levels (if it's dark, they'll be there, if not they won't).
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Cities looking for bench obstacles (Score:2)
Cities are putting all kinds of things in the middle of benches to prevent the homeless from sleeping upon them. But free WiFi! Shiny shiny.
Re:Cities looking for bench obstacles (Score:5, Insightful)
Or let you take a shower.
Or clean your clothes.
And people talk about you like you have a choice in the matter.
They put spikes and dividers on the benches so you can't sleep.
Have you ever tried to find a job when you haven't slept comfortably for god knows how long, haven't had a solid meal, haven't been able to clean yourself up?
Have you ever once, for a moment, stepped outside of your privilege and thought about what it actually means to be in that position, and what it honestly takes to get out it?
Take a nap.
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Homeless shelter means rules. No booze, no drugs. Crazy people who get in fights are not welcome.
In other words, not employable for many more reasons than a clean change of clothes.
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Well, the ACLU was cruel by throwing all the crazies out of their warm asylum beds and make them fend for themselves in Boston parks in winter.
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I guess I don't understand how sleeping on a public bench is leaching off others when the bench is made available to anyone who wants to use it. Homeless people have to sleep somewhere, and if you don't provide accessible sleeping areas, humans are going to do what humans do naturally. And it's a bit presumptuous to talk about homeless people getting a job. Many homeless people have jobs, but the pay often isn't enough to afford a place to live. This is a problem created by urban fascism, such as city o
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I guess I don't understand how sleeping on a public bench is leaching off others when the bench is made available to anyone who wants to use it.
I imagine it's hard to use a public bench when somebody else is sleeping on it.
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Parks are nut built to be campgrounds for bums.
Bums are mostly parasites. They are proud to be parasites. Call it 'being free'.
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There is a certain breed of individual that actually does want to live this way. But cities have known these people exist for generations. If you provide proper shelter for them then you have the moral ground to force them off your streets, out of your parks, and ban them from pan handling. But many cities make a concerted effort to provide no assistance and make getting help more and more difficult for the homeless.
Parks were made for public benefit, but there is a class of individuals who are now calli
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Shelter is offered. But it's not convenient to the liquor stores/drug dealers/good panhandling corners. So they setup a bum camp on the river parkway and it becomes too dangerous for anybody else to use.
Incredibly fucked. I'd just run a dozer through the camp, once a week at 4 am.
which bench is it? (Score:2)
So which bench is it?
The one picture clearly has a giant solar panel lump, and plug, taking up a seat on the bench.
The other picture is just a bench, with a square underneath it?
Why wouldn't they have put a roof height solar panel? The big goofy thing on the bench is just asking to be used for a soda and food to get spilled on..
AS well as takes away from it being a bench..
Once it's had a few lunches and soda's spilled on it, I doubt the panel will be very efficient...
Yeah, confusing pics (Score:2)
Interesting idea, but these things will disappear about 10 minutes after Cisco gets tired of throwing money at them.
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A roof would have been a much better design. I'm not sure how many people who forget to charge their phones will remember to bring a USB charger to use while they wait for the bus. There will probably be an increase of lost phones on those benches too.
Um, yeah (Score:2)
You're going to stick your USB *where* again?
A Boston public park bench USB port?
I'm not sure which kingdom of virii would be more nasty - animal, or electronic.
Do they have USB condoms?
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http://www.amazon.com/PortaPow... [amazon.com]
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Actually, yes they do!
http://int3.cc/products/usbcon... [int3.cc]
A few other places make similar products. Blocks the data pins and just leaves the charging pins bare.
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I was about to say if they don't, they should, suggesting all you need is to have ground and VCC connected and D+ and D- left open - but that's not the way it works! You might get 100 mA that way, or you might get nothing, but you'll never get the full 1/2 amp or the extended 1.8 amps that way. You need enough smarts in your "condom" to negotiate the current.
But all is not lost. I second what the AC suggests: LockedUSB [lockedusb.com]. They have done the work and produced a neat little package, and
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USB firewall (Score:1)
I wouldn't trust those park bench USB ports to not do something malicious to my phone (such as download data or install spyware). If I were ever to use one, I'd make sure to use the LockedUSB "firewall" which enables rapid charging while blocking the data lines. http://www.lockedusb.com
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...or, I'll just keep plugging my phone in at numerous public places that offer free charging, thus leaving me free to leave my tinfoil at at home.
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Didn't say it was a conspiracy.
The risk/reward ratio on caring a "USB condom" for the rest of my life is greatly in favor of just plugging in my phone without paranoia at airports and coffee shops.
USB Dead Drop (Score:2)
Sounds like the perfect place to install some nearby dead drops [wikipedia.org].
Solar Freaking Benches (Score:1)
If you're worried about being tracked/viruses... (Score:4, Interesting)
... just use a cheap USB cable from a cheap charger that only has the GND and 5V wires to save costs :)
No data exchange will be possible.
Might still be good to disinfect it after each use.
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You can build one using a few resistors. See Adafruit's MintyBoost.
dismal state of batteries (Score:2)
I couldn't help but read this article and think about the dismal state of batteries if being able to charge
your cellphone in the park is necessary. I want a SMARTphone that I can be on all day and never goes
dead as long as I charge it every night. The old non-smartphones could go a week between charges,
now most cellphones can't even last a full day so things like randomly located 3rd party "charging ports"
are considered a useful feature. Battery life is hurting innovation. We need to work to fix this.
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www.zerolemon.com
If you have a compatible phone (predominantly Samsung, though a handful of LG units are also in the mix), this solves the problem. It does keep your phone from being anorexically thin, but I personally don't mind the extra heft. I generally get between 2 and 3 days out of a charge. This past weekend it lasted an entire ten hour drive as a GPS Nav courtesy of Waze (meaning GPS receiver and screen on the entire time, both notorious power suckers), through areas with spotty cell reception. The
Homeless Bait (Score:2)
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What you are looking for is the return of "shanty towns" and your city has laws specifically banning them to make sure the homeless can not be in one spit with even a ramshackle roof over their heads.
Germany is laughing at you Boston (Score:2)
see title
Boston has solar powered trash cans, too. (Score:3)
Okay, technically, they're trash compactors, so that they don't have to go and empty them as often:
http://www.cityofboston.gov/pu... [cityofboston.gov]
That seems to make more sense to me than a 'solar powered bench' which looks to me to be two seats as the whole middle of it's taken up by a box. (which might be the point -- it'd be less comfortable for a homeless person to sleep on it)
I've seen other solar "urban furniture" that made more sense to me -- things like bus stops w/ solar panels in the roof (to power lighting, up-to-date bus info ... and sometimes advertising).
I've seen other 'solar phone charging stations' that make more sense to me than having it take up 1/4 of a bench:
http://inhabitat.com/nyc/solar... [inhabitat.com]
http://www.gizmag.com/street-c... [gizmag.com]
http://bostinno.streetwise.co/... [streetwise.co]
Smart new trend in solar energy (Score:2)
Putting solar panels into things that are usually shaded by other things.
Why not make a roof for the bench out of solar panels instead?
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I think you're right. This is an anti-hobo bench block with a nice green coat of paint to hide its true, mean-spirited purpose. From an engineering standpoint it makes much more sense that way.
Overselling it... (Score:2)
"We are fortunate to have talented entrepreneurs and makers in Boston thinking creatively about sustainability and the next generation of amenities for our residents."
Oh dear god, any high school student can make a bench "solar powered".
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yes, slap a solar panel charged usb port on anything and it becomes "smart" and "sustainable" and "next generation"
Coming to a park near you, the Smart and Sustainable Porta-Potty and the Smart and Sustainable Hot Dog Stand
Park benches? (Score:2)
Finally, a new definition for hobo power [urbandictionary.com]
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